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Mardia Chemicals: How the Supreme Court Saved Borrower Rights While Upholding SARFAESI

On 8 April 2004 the Supreme Court upheld the SARFAESI Act but struck down its 75% pre-deposit, forcing Section 13(3A) into law. Here is the borrower defence playbook it created.

Subodh Bajpai
Subodh Bajpai
Advocate (Delhi High Court), Senior Partner at Unified Chambers and Associates. MBA Finance (XLRI), LLM (Delhi University). Principal Consultant on banking, debt recovery, FEMA, and NRI matters.
|12 min read · 2,563 words
Verified Sources|Source: Supreme Court of India|Last reviewed: 10 June 2026
Mardia Chemicals: How the Supreme Court Saved Borrower Rights While Upholding SARFAESI — Loan Defence Playbook on Oquilia

When the SARFAESI Act arrived in 2002, it handed banks a power they had never held in independent India: the ability to seize and sell a defaulter's mortgaged property without first going to court. Borrowers called it draconian. Within two years the question reached the Supreme Court, and on 8 April 2004 a two-judge bench delivered Mardia Chemicals Ltd vs Union of India — the judgement that still defines what a secured creditor can and cannot do to you.

The verdict was a split decision in substance. The Court upheld the constitutional validity of the entire SARFAESI Act 2002, refusing to strike it down as the borrowers had demanded. But in the same breath it tore out the most punishing clause in the statute — the requirement that a borrower deposit 75% of the claimed dues before being allowed to challenge the bank in a tribunal. That single excision, recorded on 8 April 2004, is the reason borrower defences under the Act exist in their present form.

This playbook explains the Mardia Chemicals ruling section by section: what survived, what fell, and the procedural safeguards it forced Parliament to write into the law through Act 30 of 2004. If you have received a notice under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, the safeguards described below are the ones the Supreme Court created for you.

Stone columns of an Indian courthouse symbolising the Supreme Court's review of SARFAESI
Stone columns of an Indian courthouse symbolising the Supreme Court's review of SARFAESI

The Statutory Position

The Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 — universally shortened to the SARFAESI Act — lets a secured creditor enforce its security interest in a secured loan without the intervention of a civil court. The bare text is hosted by the Government of India at indiacode.nic.in, and the enforcement machinery sits almost entirely in Section 13.

In Mardia Chemicals Ltd vs Union of India, decided 8 April 2004 and reported at indiankanoon.org/doc/1059476, the petitioners argued that the whole Act violated Article 14 of the Constitution because it let a lender act as judge in its own cause. The Supreme Court rejected the broad challenge. It held that the 2002 statute was a valid response to the recommendations on rising non-performing assets, and that allowing banks to recover security without a suit was not, by itself, unconstitutional.

The Court drew the line at one provision. Under Section 17 as originally enacted in 2002, a borrower wishing to appeal to the Debts Recovery Tribunal had to first deposit 75% of the amount claimed in the demand notice. The bench held this condition to be unreasonable, arbitrary and violative of Article 14, because it shut the door of the tribunal to the very people the appeal was meant to protect. The 75% pre-deposit was struck down on 8 April 2004.

Striking down the pre-deposit created a vacuum, and Parliament filled it through the Enforcement of Security Interest and Recovery of Debts Laws (Amendment) Act, 2004 — Act 30 of 2004. The most important insertion was Section 13(3A). Before 2004 a bank could ignore a borrower's objection to its demand notice; after Act 30 of 2004 it cannot. The table below maps what Mardia Chemicals changed.

ProvisionPosition before 8 April 2004Position after Mardia + Act 30 of 2004
Section 17 pre-deposit75% of claimed dues before appeal to DRTStruck down; no mandatory deposit to file under Section 17
Section 13(3A)Did not existCreditor must reply to borrower's representation with reasons within 15 days
Section 34 civil-court barAbsolute bar on civil suitsNarrow exception read in for fraudulent or absurd creditor claims
Validity of the ActChallenged as unconstitutionalUpheld in full by the Supreme Court

The second pillar the Court addressed was the bar on civil suits. Section 34 of the 2002 Act prevents a civil court from entertaining any suit relating to a matter that a Debts Recovery Tribunal is empowered to decide. The Mardia bench, on 8 April 2004, carved a narrow exception: a civil court is not entirely ousted where the creditor's action or claim is shown to be fraudulent or so absurd that no person could accept it. That exception is deliberately tight, and the Court warned against using it to reopen ordinary recovery disputes.

Procedure Step by Step

The post-Mardia enforcement sequence runs through Section 13 in a fixed order. Each step below carries the statutory time limit confirmed against the SARFAESI provisions hosted at indiacode.nic.in.

  1. Default and NPA classification. The account must first be classified as a non-performing asset in line with the Reserve Bank's income-recognition and asset-classification norms published at rbi.org.in. Only a secured creditor holding a defaulted secured debt can invoke Section 13.
  1. Section 13(2) demand notice. The secured creditor issues a written demand giving the borrower 60 days to discharge the full liability. The notice must specify the amount due and the secured assets the creditor intends to enforce.
  1. Borrower's representation under Section 13(3A). Within the 60-day window the borrower may submit a representation or objection. This step exists only because of Mardia Chemicals and Act 30 of 2004 — it was the price the legislature paid for keeping the Act alive.
  1. Creditor's reasoned reply. The secured creditor must consider the representation and, if it rejects the objection, communicate the reasons for non-acceptance to the borrower within 15 days. A reply that is silent or mechanical can be challenged as a breach of Section 13(3A).
  1. Section 13(4) enforcement measures. If the borrower neither pays within 60 days nor succeeds with the representation, the creditor may take possession (symbolic or physical), sell or lease the secured asset, or appoint a manager — all without the intervention of a court.
  1. Sale and recovery. The secured asset is sold under the prescribed rules and the proceeds applied against the debt, with any surplus returned to the borrower.

The same six-step machinery is why a homeowner facing recovery should model the cost of clearing the dues early. Our loan foreclosure calculator shows what a full settlement looks like before a Section 13(4) sale, and the loan against property calculator helps borrowers gauge the equity at stake when the mortgaged asset is their home or commercial premises.

Section 13 stepActionStatutory timeline
13(2)Demand notice to borrower60 days to pay
13(3A)Borrower representation, then creditor replyReply with reasons within 15 days
13(4)Possession, sale, lease or managerAfter the 60-day notice lapses
17Appeal to DRT against 13(4) measuresWithin 45 days
18Appeal to DRAT against DRT orderWithin 30 days, 50% pre-deposit

Borrower Defences Available

The defences that Mardia Chemicals preserved are procedural, and they reward borrowers who act on the calendar rather than on emotion.

Force a reasoned reply under Section 13(3A). The single most useful safeguard is also the most overlooked. A borrower who files a substantive representation within the 60-day notice period compels the bank to reply with reasons within 15 days. If the creditor proceeds to Section 13(4) measures without that reasoned reply, the omission is a direct violation of the provision the Supreme Court engineered in 2004, and tribunals routinely set such possession actions aside.

Appeal to the DRT under Section 17 with no 75% deposit. Because the Mardia bench struck down the pre-deposit on 8 April 2004, a borrower can today approach the Debts Recovery Tribunal against Section 13(4) measures without paying any percentage of the disputed debt up front. The appeal must be filed within 45 days of the measure complained of. A deposit is not mandatory to maintain the application, though the tribunal retains discretion to direct one in appropriate cases.

Appeal onward to the DRAT under Section 18. An order of the DRT can be carried to the Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal within 30 days. Here the pre-deposit survives in a reduced form: no appeal is entertained unless the borrower deposits 50% of the debt due as claimed by the creditor or determined by the DRT, whichever is less. The DRAT may, for reasons recorded in writing, reduce that deposit to not less than 25%. The contrast is instructive — Mardia killed the 75% gate at the first appellate stage but Parliament retained a 50% gate, reducible to 25%, at the second.

Invoke the Section 34 fraud exception sparingly. Where the creditor's claim is fraudulent or absurd, the civil-court bar in Section 34 does not apply, per the carve-out the Supreme Court read in on 8 April 2004. This is not a route for ordinary disputes about interest computation; it is reserved for cases where the very foundation of the claim is dishonest.

Negotiate a one-time settlement. Outside litigation, a borrower may pursue a compromise settlement under the Reserve Bank's framework on compromise settlements and technical write-offs, available at rbi.org.in. A settlement does not surrender the borrower's statutory rights under Sections 17 and 18, and many borrowers run the litigation clock and the settlement track in parallel. Borrowers juggling several liabilities can map the arithmetic with our debt consolidation calculator before committing to a settlement figure.

The forum table below summarises where each remedy lives.

RemedySectionForumLimitationPre-deposit
Representation against demand13(3A)The secured creditorWithin 60-day noticeNone
First appeal17Debts Recovery Tribunal45 daysNone (post-Mardia)
Second appeal18DRAT30 days50%, reducible to 25%
Fraud / absurd claim34 exceptionCivil courtAs per limitation lawNone

Recent Tribunal/HC Position

The authority that anchors every point above remains Mardia Chemicals Ltd vs Union of India, decided 8 April 2004 and hosted at indiankanoon.org/doc/1059476. Two of its holdings continue to drive tribunal practice more than two decades later.

First, the reasoned-reply requirement under Section 13(3A) is treated as mandatory, not directory. Tribunals reading Mardia together with Act 30 of 2004 have consistently held that a secured creditor who moves to Section 13(4) possession without communicating reasons within 15 days has acted in breach of the statute, and the borrower's Section 17 application succeeds on that ground alone. The safeguard the Court created in 2004 is therefore a live, frequently-used defence rather than a historical footnote.

Second, the Section 34 civil-court bar is enforced strictly, with the Mardia fraud exception applied narrowly. Courts have repeatedly turned borrowers away from civil suits and back to the DRT, holding that disputes over the quantum of dues, the validity of the demand, or the conduct of the sale fall squarely within Section 17 and must be heard there. The fraud exception is reserved, as the Supreme Court intended on 8 April 2004, for claims that are dishonest at their root.

The doctrinal line Mardia drew — uphold the recovery machinery, but force procedural fairness into it — also runs through the parallel insolvency regime. Our explainer on the IBC Section 7 financial creditor threshold raised to Rs 1 crore shows how the same balance between creditor power and debtor protection plays out when a default crosses into the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016.

A borrower reviewing loan documents at a desk before responding to a recovery notice
A borrower reviewing loan documents at a desk before responding to a recovery notice

What This Means for Borrowers Today

The practical lesson of Mardia Chemicals is that the clock, not the courtroom drama, decides outcomes. A borrower who receives a Section 13(2) notice has 60 days to act, and the most valuable thing to do inside that window is file a written representation under Section 13(3A) so the bank is forced into a reasoned reply within 15 days. Missing the 45-day window for a Section 17 appeal, or the 30-day window for a Section 18 appeal, forfeits the very safeguards the Supreme Court fought to preserve on 8 April 2004. Treat each statutory deadline as the defence itself.

Equally, the 50% pre-deposit at the DRAT stage means the borrower's strongest play is almost always at the DRT under Section 17, where Mardia removed the 75% barrier entirely. Use the first appeal fully before escalating, and run a one-time settlement track in parallel under the RBI framework at rbi.org.in.

FAQ

Did the Supreme Court strike down the SARFAESI Act in Mardia Chemicals?

No. In its judgement of 8 April 2004 the Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of the SARFAESI Act 2002 in full. It struck down only the 75% pre-deposit condition under the original Section 17, holding that single clause to be arbitrary and violative of Article 14.

What pre-deposit do I have to pay to challenge a bank under SARFAESI?

Nothing at the first stage. Because Mardia Chemicals struck down the 75% pre-deposit on 8 April 2004, a Section 17 application to the Debts Recovery Tribunal carries no mandatory deposit. A deposit only re-appears at the second appeal under Section 18, where 50% of the dues is required, reducible by the DRAT to not less than 25% for reasons recorded in writing.

What is the deadline to appeal against a possession notice?

A Section 17 application against Section 13(4) measures must be filed at the Debts Recovery Tribunal within 45 days of the measure complained of. A further appeal to the DRAT under Section 18 must be filed within 30 days of the DRT order.

What is Section 13(3A) and why does it matter?

Section 13(3A) was inserted by Act 30 of 2004 in direct response to Mardia Chemicals. It lets a borrower submit a representation against the 60-day demand notice and obliges the secured creditor to reply with reasons within 15 days. A creditor who skips this reasoned reply before taking possession acts in breach of the statute.

Can I file a civil suit against the bank instead of going to the DRT?

Only in narrow circumstances. Section 34 bars civil suits on matters the DRT can decide. The Mardia bench, on 8 April 2004, allowed one exception — where the creditor's claim is fraudulent or absurd. Ordinary disputes about the amount due or the conduct of the sale must go to the DRT under Section 17.

Can I still negotiate a one-time settlement after a SARFAESI notice?

Yes. A compromise settlement under the Reserve Bank's framework hosted at rbi.org.in can be pursued at any stage, and it does not waive your statutory rights under Sections 17 and 18. Many borrowers pursue the appeal and the settlement simultaneously.

Does Mardia Chemicals still apply after so many years?

Yes. Mardia Chemicals Ltd vs Union of India, decided 8 April 2004 and reported at indiankanoon.org/doc/1059476, remains the foundational authority on SARFAESI's validity and on the Section 13(3A) reasoned-reply safeguard. Tribunals continue to apply both holdings.

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Sources & Citations

  1. Mardia Chemicals Ltd vs Union of India (decided 8 April 2004) — indiankanoon.org
  2. Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 — indiacode.nic.in
  3. RBI framework on compromise settlements and income-recognition / asset-classification norms — rbi.org.in

Frequently Asked Questions

Did the Supreme Court strike down the SARFAESI Act in Mardia Chemicals?

No. In its judgement of 8 April 2004 the Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of the SARFAESI Act 2002 in full. It struck down only the 75% pre-deposit condition under the original Section 17, holding that single clause to be arbitrary and violative of Article 14.

What pre-deposit do I have to pay to challenge a bank under SARFAESI?

Nothing at the first stage. Because Mardia Chemicals struck down the 75% pre-deposit on 8 April 2004, a Section 17 application to the Debts Recovery Tribunal carries no mandatory deposit. A deposit only re-appears at the second appeal under Section 18, where 50% of the dues is required, reducible by the DRAT to not less than 25% for reasons recorded in writing.

What is the deadline to appeal against a possession notice?

A Section 17 application against Section 13(4) measures must be filed at the Debts Recovery Tribunal within 45 days of the measure complained of. A further appeal to the DRAT under Section 18 must be filed within 30 days of the DRT order.

What is Section 13(3A) and why does it matter?

Section 13(3A) was inserted by Act 30 of 2004 in direct response to Mardia Chemicals. It lets a borrower submit a representation against the 60-day demand notice and obliges the secured creditor to reply with reasons within 15 days. A creditor who skips this reasoned reply before taking possession acts in breach of the statute.

Can I file a civil suit against the bank instead of going to the DRT?

Only in narrow circumstances. Section 34 bars civil suits on matters the DRT can decide. The Mardia bench, on 8 April 2004, allowed one exception - where the creditor claim is fraudulent or absurd. Ordinary disputes about the amount due or the conduct of the sale must go to the DRT under Section 17.

Can I still negotiate a one-time settlement after a SARFAESI notice?

Yes. A compromise settlement under the Reserve Bank framework hosted at rbi.org.in can be pursued at any stage, and it does not waive your statutory rights under Sections 17 and 18. Many borrowers pursue the appeal and the settlement simultaneously.

Does Mardia Chemicals still apply after so many years?

Yes. Mardia Chemicals Ltd vs Union of India, decided 8 April 2004 and reported at indiankanoon.org/doc/1059476, remains the foundational authority on SARFAESI validity and on the Section 13(3A) reasoned-reply safeguard. Tribunals continue to apply both holdings.

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This article was last reviewed on 10 June 2026by Oquilia's editorial team. Every claim is sourced from primary regulatory materials (CBDT, IRDAI, RBI, SEBI, Indian Kanoon). View our methodology.

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